Set in Vancouver, the show follows the escapades of Jimmy Reardon (Ian Tracey), a third-generation crime lord who specializes in smuggling and distributing marijuana throughout Canada and the Northwestern United States, and Mary Spalding (Klea Scott), the ambitious head of the Vancouver Police Department's Organized Crime Unit (OCU), who is eyeing a promotion to director of Asia-Pacific affairs for the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), Canada's answer to the CIA. Seeing an opportunity to advance each other's interests, the two form an uneasy truce, with Jimmy serving as Mary's most important new source of gangland intelligence in exchange for protection from criminal prosecution.

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But all is not well in Vancouver. Mary's Machiavellian deputy, Ted Altman (Matt Frewer), looking to advance his own standing, conspires against her with CSIS director Roger Deakins (Tom McBeath), the man she is aiming to replace, and eventually decides that the easiest way to undermine her will be to have Jimmy busted by his contacts in the American Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). Jimmy, meanwhile, seems pulled inexorably into open warfare with Dante Ribiso (Fulvio Cecere), the rapacious leader of a local biker gang, just as he has made a risky and expensive investment in a series of ATMs for a money laundering scheme.

Other subplots involve the discovery that a Chinese Triad has planted a mole (Rick Tae) in the OCU and the possibility that the CIA has planted another in CSIS, Jimmy's often futile efforts to deal with his vindictive ex-wife Francine (Camille Sullivan) and well-meaning but incompetent brother Michael (Bernie Coulson), a plot by an American agribusiness to steal Canadian trade secrets, and an arms deal between a fugitive cocaine smuggler (Hugo Ateo), a crooked stockbroker (Bill Mondy) looking to diversify, and a DEA agent (Aaron Pearl) who may or may not have gone rogue.

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And that's just the first season.

Despite widespread critical acclaim, culminating in a Gemini Award for Best Dramatic Series in 2007, the series was abruptly cancelled after two seasons, amid rumors that it was killed for political reasons over its negative portrayal of American intelligence agencies, law enforcement, and big business.

Bad Cop, Incompetent Cop: Corruption and incompetence are systemic in every single law enforcement agency portrayed, much to Mary's chagrin. The Vancouver Police are riddled with Dirty Cops on the take, CSIS leaks like a sieve, and the DEA are a bunch of criminals with badges.

Bare Your Midriff: Francine, all the time. Her classic outfit is in the page picture above.

Becoming the Mask: Martin is originally only working for Mary because she dangles a promotion in front of his nose. By Season 2, he has come to respect her so much that he offers to put his career on the line to protect her.

Black and Gray Morality: When the most sympathetic, least ruthless character in the whole show is a gangster who smuggles and distributes drugs, you might say so.

Bounty Hunter: A former CIA agent brought in by Mary to consult for her turns out to be one, and is quite miffed when she refuses to let him collect on a particular bounty until she can identify all of the people the target is dealing with.

CIA Evil, FBI Good: The CIA does come off pretty badly. On the other hand, the kneejerk belief that the CIA is evil causes Mary to miss the otherwise obvious conclusion that Jimmy's people killed Richard Royden to protect him from exposure.

Chuck Cunningham Syndrome: Jimmy and Michael used to have a sister. She appeared in two episodes, introduced a plot about retrieving old whisky from the bottom of the harbor, and neither her nor the whisky ever appeared again.

City of Spies: Who knew Vancouver was such a wretched hive of spies and international criminals?

"Get out of Jail Free" Card: Jimmy's reason for cooperating with Mary (in addition to occasionally extracting small crumbs of information out of her).

The Handler: Martin handles most of Mary's moles, although she runs a few herself.

HeelFace Mole: Randy Bingham, one of Mary's moles, tries to pull this off, stringing her along and collecting a paycheck while keeping her in the dark about his latest weapons deal. Unfortunately for him, one of the other people she's spying on is his customer.

Jurisdiction Friction: An international flavor. One of the series' overarching themes is the proprietary view American agencies like the CIA and DEA take of Canada, treating it as though it were simply the 51st state. Naturally, their Canadian counterparts are displeased by this.

Karma Houdini: A wide variety of characters (it's that sort of show), but special mention has to go to Ted.

Kavorka Man: Martin, Mary's right-hand man, seems to be very smooth with the ladies, despite being a plain-featured, middle-aged, middle-class, bald, and somewhat portly civil servant.

Might as Well Not Be in Prison at All: In the first episode, Michael is in jail after a drug deal he set up without Jimmy's knowledge goes sour. In typical Michael fashion, this doesn't stop him from setting up another one before he's even gotten out.

Mob War: Each season has a major story arc involving Jimmy's attempt to prevent one. In Season 1, the troublemakers are the Disciples. In Season 2, it's a group of American dealers trying to take over.

The Mole: Half the cast is a mole for somebody. Some are double- or even triple-agents.

Police Brutality: In the Season 2 premiere, the DEA accidentally shoots their informant, an innocent bystander, and one of their own agents while attempting to kill an unarmed Jimmy. Later, Michael is brutally beaten by the RCMP.

Private Detective: Mary hires one to spy on her husband when she suspects he's been cheating on her.

Screw The Rules, I Have Connections!: Mary is able to thumb her nose at her superiors with surprising frequency, because it turns out she has a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee in her corner. Until she doesn't anymore. Oops.

White Collar Crime: In Season 1, a group of American businessmen are conspiring with Chinese diplomats to steal seed patents from a Canadian biotech company. In Season 2, an American conglomerate called the Blackmire Group conspires to illegally rig Canadian parliamentary elections and take over the Canadian water supply (it's kept a little vague).

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